TV: Glastonbury 2013

Now Glastonbury is over and the last revellers are swept blinking into the real world, you have until the end of the weekend to catch TV highlights, while clips will be available for 30 days. The Beeb did a great job capturing the big hitters and cult performers such as Ondatrópica and the Congos, all shot in the kind of intimate detail that lets you inspect Haim's nail art.

TV: Orange Is The New Black

The latest in Netflix's continuing attempts to terminate TV in its traditional form, this comedy-drama from Weeds creator Jenji Kohan adapts Piper Kerman's bestselling memoir of her time spent in a woman's correctional facility for money laundering and drug trafficking. Fans of Kohan's earlier work will no doubt lap up the show's brisk, darkly funny tone. All 13 episodes of the show's first season are available from Thursday.

TV: Once Upon A Time

Now in its second season, this twisty fairytale drama is one of many shows given the dreaded title of "the new Lost". Fortunately, unlike most of its fellow post-Losties, Once Upon A Time has managed to retain viewers in the US, with a third season and an Alice In Wonderland-themed spin-off commissioned. UK viewers, meanwhile, can catch the most recent handful of episodes on Demand 5.

TV: BBC3 Comedy Feeds

Another annual truckload of web-exclusive pilots from BBC3. Last year's lot resulted in full series commissions for fitfully brilliant hidden-camera show Impractical Jokers and pirate-radio spoof People Just Do Nothing. This year's efforts, meanwhile, include a studio-based entertainment show from Live At The Electric regular Nick Helm, and a Welsh working men's club-set sitcom from Cymru comics Elis James and Chris Corcoran.

TV: The Greatest Shows On Earth

Daisy Donovan fell off the radar after her Theroux-esque docs and 11 O'Clock Show fame, but she's back in a funny, eye-opening series available on 4oD, tracking the world's TV culture and showing how mindblowingly crass much of it is. From bum-comparing Brazilian talent shows to Egyptian celebrities in mock-hostage situations, it's like an Alan Partridge pitching session made weirdly manifest.

TV: Ray Donovan

This Liev Schreiber-starring US drama about a reformed criminal charged with "fixing" the LA elite's unpleasant little problems begins its Sky Atlantic run next week. On Demand viewers though can get acquainted early by catching the first episode On Demand from this Wednesday.